Author:
MONIS P. T.,ANDREWS R. H.,MAYRHOFER G.,MACKRILL J.,KULDA J.,ISAAC-RENTON J. L.,EY P. L.
Abstract
Infection of suckling mice with Giardia trophozoites
recovered from the intestines of 11 dogs autopsied in Central and
Southern Australia in each case produced an established isolate.
In contrast, only 1 isolate was obtained by inoculation
of faecal cysts. The organisms grew poorly in comparison with
isolates from humans or non-canine animal hosts. Light
microscopy revealed that the trophozoites had median bodies with the
‘claw hammer’ appearance typical of G. intestinalis
(syn. G. duodenalis, G. lamblia) but that they
differed in shape and nuclear morphology from axenic isolates of human or
canine origin. Allozymic analysis of electrophoretic data
representing 26 loci and phylogenetic analysis of nucleotide
sequences obtained from DNA amplified from the glutamate dehydrogenase
locus showed that the 11 isolates examined
from Australian dogs were genetically distinct from all isolates of
G. intestinalis that have been established previously from
humans and animals, and also from G. muris. Both
analytical methods placed 10 of the Australian canine isolates into a
unique genetic lineage (designated Assemblage C) and the eleventh
into a deep-rooted second branch (designated
Assemblage D), each well separated from the 2 lineages (Assemblages
A and B) of G. intestinalis that encompass all the
genotypes known to infect humans. In contrast, 4 axenic isolates
derived from dogs in Canada and Europe (the only other
isolates to have been established from dogs) have genotypes
characteristic of genetic Assemblages A or B. The findings
indicate that the novel Giardia identified in these rural
Australian dogs have a restricted host range, possibly confined to
canine species. The poor success rate in establishing Giardia
from dogs in vitro suggests, further, that similar genotypes
may predominate as canine parasites world-wide. The absence of
such organisms among isolates of Giardia that have been
established from humans by propagation in suckling mice indicates that
they are unlikely to infect humans. However,
infection of humans by those dog-derived genotypes that grow
in vitro cannot be excluded.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
102 articles.
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